Pacific States Sav., Loan & Building Co. v. Green

114 F. 412, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4855
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedMarch 12, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 114 F. 412 (Pacific States Sav., Loan & Building Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific States Sav., Loan & Building Co. v. Green, 114 F. 412, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4855 (circtdor 1902).

Opinion

BELLINGER, District Judge.

This is a suit to recover $2,594.90,. and to foreclose a real estate mortgage given, as is alleged, to secure said sum. The complaint alleges, in effect, that on February 23, 1893, the defendant Lizzie A. Green was the owner of no shares of the capital stock or plaintiff, of the par value of $100 per share, for which she agreed to pay 60 cents per month per share, or $66-per month, until said shares, “by said payments and. the accumulations allotted to the same by reason of profits earned, would become matured, and of the par value of $100 each;” that on the same day said defendant applied for a loan of $5,500, and accompanied such application with a bid for the loan, which bid was as follows:

“Amount of money desired as loan, $5,500. Applied for Feb’y 23rd, 1893. I hereby agree to hold 110 shares of stock in the Pacific States Savings, Loan and Building Go., and to continue payments of installments on said stock until the same shall mature, or until the loan is otherwise paid. I also hereby agree to pay said company a bonus of fifty-five shares of the stock above [413]*413referred to, as a consideration for the loan of ,$5,500 applied for. Lizzie A. Green [Signature of applicant], February 28rd, 1888. Witness: I. C. Hicks.”

—That the plaintiff company, upon or prior to March ioth, accepted said bid, and agreed to loan Lizzie A. Green the sum of $5,500 in accordance with the terms and conditions mentioned, and according to the terms and conditions of a certain indenture oí bond which was, on the 15th of March, 1893, executed by Lizzie A. Green and James W. Green, her husband, a copy of which is made a part of the complaint. This bond was secured by a mortgage upon certain real estate, represented in the application for the loan to be of the cash value, with improvements, of $12,000. The bond recites that whereas the company only loans its money to its stockholders, and only in proportion to the amount of stock held by such stockholders, and that w'hereas Lizzie A. Green is the owner of no shares, and has bid the sum of $5,500, being the par value of 55 shares of said stock, “as and for a premium for the advancement by said company of $5,500 by way of anticipation of the value at their maturity of no shares of the capital stock of said company now owned by said Lizzie A. Green, and whereas the said company, in consideration of said premises, and by way' of said anticipation, has this da)Rdvanced to said Lizzie A. Green and James W. Green $5,500, now, therefore,” etc. Then follows the obligation of the bond, which will be referred to later.

From what is stated so far, it appears that the transaction was one of loan, and that the stock subscription was merely a mode adopted by the parties of making the loan. According to the recital in the bond, the $5,500 loaned was an “advancement” by the company in, anticipation of the value at their maturity of the no shares of stock subscribed for by Lizzie A. Green. In other words, the no shares of matured stock were valued at $5,500, and by way of anticipation of such value there was an “advancement” of that sum. One-half of the no shares of stock were, as a part of the transaction by which they were acquired, given back to the company as a “bonus” for the loan or advancement. The remaining 55 shares are treated as pledged to the company, but by the terms of the bond executed on March 10th the entire no shares were “sold, assigned, transferred, and set over” to the company absolutely, no right or interest whatever remaining in the subscriber. This is in keeping with the theory of an “advancement” by the company of the value of the 110 shares at their maturity, but if the defendant is obligated to pay the $66 per month until the no shares become, by such payments and earnings, fully paid, and of the par value of $100 per share, together with interest on such loan or advancement, the contract becomes one of unusual hardship, and such as a court of equity will not enforce.

The obliga! ion of the bond is that the Greens are to pay, on or before seven years, the sum of $5,500 and the full amount of the premium, if said no shares shall have matured and become worth par, or, in case said stock has not matured, then so much of said premium as may have been earned at the time the whole of the stun advanced is repaid, together with interest, etc., or, in default of such [414]*414payment, then the alternative is to pay the $66- each month, “as and for the monthly dues on said one hundred and ten shares, now owned by said Lizzie A. Green, and by her hereby sold, assigned, transferred, and set over to said company,” together with $27.50 each month as interest, and also all fines and charges until said stock becomes fully paid in and of the par value of $100 per share, and shall then surrender said stock to the company. If by the word “premium” in the provision in. this bond requiring the Greens to pay the sum of $5,500 and the full amount of the premium, if the said no shares shall have matured and become worth par, or in case said stock has not matured, then so much of said premium as may have been earned at the time the whole of the advance is repaid, is meant the par value of the 55 shares bid as a bonus, or the amount of the installments paid at the time the loan is repaid, the stock not having matured, it results that, if the stock has matured, the full value of $5,500 is required to be paid as a premium in addition to the repayment of the sum of $5,500 loaned or advanced, or, if the stock has not matured, then whatever has been paid in installments on account of this stock must go to the company in addition to the repayment of the money loaned and interest. Thejjgther alternative of the bond is the payment of the monthly instamients, together with interest installments, until the entire no shares are matured, or are of par value, and the surrender of the no shares to the company. Between these alternatives, there is no choice. In either case the company will receive double the amount advanced.

The proviso in the bond by which, upon a six months’ default in the payment of installments, the company may elect to declare the loan and the premiums then earned due, and recover the same, less the withdrawal value of said no shares, allows nothing to the borrower for the withdrawal value of the no shares above the debt. This is consistent with the recital in the bond that the $5,500 was an advancement by the company by way of anticipation of the value at their maturity of no shares of the capital stock owned by Lizzie A. Green. This recital, as well as the condition in the bid by which the defendant borrower agreed to hold no shares and to continue payments of installments thereon until the same shall mature, or until the loan is otherwise paid, shows that all installments paid on the no shares were so much paid on the loan, or on account of it. If the loan was “otherwise paid” the obligation to pay installments ceased. It was not intended that the loan would be “otherwise paid,” and yet this phrase is cumulative of what is plain enough without it, — that the stock subscription and holding and the payments to be made nominally on that account were merely the means of repaying the loan and of securing an unconscionable bonus besides. In this connection consider this allegation in the complaint: That thereupon, upon the execution of the bond by Lizzie A. Green' and her husband, the said plaintiff advanced to said Lizzie A. Green the said sum of $5,500, “which was to be repaid by the maturing of the shares which she held in said plaintiff corporation by making the monthly payments thereon as specified in her said application and

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Bluebook (online)
114 F. 412, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-states-sav-loan-building-co-v-green-circtdor-1902.